The Mercury News

Botswana’s top vet defends probe into elephant deaths

- By Brian Benza and Alexander Winning

GABORONE, BOTSWANA >>

Botswana’s top wildlife vet on Friday dismissed accusation­s from some conservati­onists that the government had not moved quickly enough to investigat­e the unexplaine­d deaths of least 275 elephants.

Authoritie­s said on Thursday they were still trying to find out what killed the elephants around two months after the first carcasses were spotted in the Okavango Panhandle region.

Widely published pictures of the bodies triggered an internatio­nal outcry, and some campaign groups raised questions about why test results had not come through.

“A government investigat­ing team has been on the ground since the first cases were reported,” Mmadi Reuben, principal veterinary officer in the Department of Wildlife and National Parks, told Reuters. “Botswana responded swiftly.”

He said local teams had carried out tests and ruled out anthrax as a cause. “We then sent samples to Zimbabwe and South Africa to test for other known pathogens or a novel pathogen,” he said.

The coronaviru­s crisis had delayed some samples leaving the country, he said.

Poaching has been ruled out, as the carcasses were found intact.

Botswana is home to around 130,000 elephants, a third of Africa’s total, making it a magnet for wildlife lovers.

“Elephants began dying in huge numbers in early May and the government would normally respond within days to an event of this scale,” Mark Hiley, cofounder of National Park Rescue, said on Thursday.

“Yet here we are, months later, with no testing completed and with no more informatio­n than we had at the start.”

Chris Thouless, head of research at Save the Elephants, said mass elephant deaths on this scale were almost unpreceden­ted, save during droughts. But he said it was wrong to assume the government had been dragging its feet.

“This is pretty remote country, hearing about the carcasses, getting in there, taking a whole range of samples, knowing how and where to get them from, ... that is a pretty difficult task.”

If a virus was to blame, he said the government had a limited range of options. “You’re not going to be able to get the elephants to do social distancing, and you’re not going to be able to inoculate them.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Botswana says it is investigat­ing a staggering­ly high number of elephant carcasses, with 275 found in the popular Okavango Delta area of the southern African nation in recent weeks.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Botswana says it is investigat­ing a staggering­ly high number of elephant carcasses, with 275 found in the popular Okavango Delta area of the southern African nation in recent weeks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States